Bedlam
An intimate journey into Americas Mental Health Crisis
Bedlam is the first major documentary to explore the crisis in care of severely mentally-ill citizens. Set in Los Angeles, the film tracks wrenching individual stories of mentally-ill patients caught on an endless merry-go-round of ineffective care, exposing the anatomy of a broken healthcare mill.
What was once a system built around long-term asylum care has essentially become a crude horror show for thousands who are detained, medicated, and tossed onto the streets with no means of recovery. There, petty crime and drug addiction land many in prison, where they are detained and medicated again, creating a tragic loop. As one psychiatrist points out, this government-sanctioned loop is the actual definition of insanity. Add to that the fact that few psychiatrists are even willing to treat those most severely afflicted, and you’ve got an all-out crisis that’s also a major source of homelessness and incarceration.
With a mixture of pained intimacy and sweeping historical context, Bedlam shows how deep-seated shame, stigma, and decades-long political negligence have led to the single largest social catastrophe of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
Director
Kenneth Paul Rosenberg
Producer
Peter Miller and Kenneth Paul Rosenberg
Runtime
84 minutes
Rights Represented
Educational Rights, International Rights
Captions Available
English
Language
English
Press
“…unblinking look at the lives of people with severe mental illness, this is a necessary and important film.”
- The Hollywood Reporter
Festival & Awards
Official Selection – Sundance Film Festival